Language, Band 50,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1974 |
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Seite 66
... assumption that the stress in citations elicited from an informant is the same as the stress used by a speaker making ... assumed that non - normal stress is to be described as a deviation from the norm , thus pre- supposing an adequate ...
... assumption that the stress in citations elicited from an informant is the same as the stress used by a speaker making ... assumed that non - normal stress is to be described as a deviation from the norm , thus pre- supposing an adequate ...
Seite 117
... assumed to be in the addressee's conscious- ness . We might therefore expect the pronoun I to be usually pronounced with low pitch . And yet we don't have to look far to find many sentences in which this is not the case : ( 7 ) I killed ...
... assumed to be in the addressee's conscious- ness . We might therefore expect the pronoun I to be usually pronounced with low pitch . And yet we don't have to look far to find many sentences in which this is not the case : ( 7 ) I killed ...
Seite 239
... assumed without question that binary features were to be used even to represent pitch in tone languages . On the other hand , Jakobson & Halle ( 1956 : 48 ) seem not to make the assumption ; and Halle ( 1957 , 1959a , 1959b : 504 ) ...
... assumed without question that binary features were to be used even to represent pitch in tone languages . On the other hand , Jakobson & Halle ( 1956 : 48 ) seem not to make the assumption ; and Halle ( 1957 , 1959a , 1959b : 504 ) ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 1 |
Abschnitt 2 | 29 |
Abschnitt 3 | 52 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A-replc abstract addressee's consciousness alternative analysis antonymous antonymous adjectives apply articulatory assumed chimpanzees Chomsky complex consonants constraints context contrast copula counter-bleeding deictic deictic center deixis deletion derivational history dialect diphthongs discussion distinction Dravidian Dravidian languages Elamite English environment Epenthesis evidence examples extrinsic ordering fact Finnish function gemination given glossolalia gorgia grammar hypothesis initial d involved Kiparsky labial learning lexical entries lexical representations linguistic meaning morpheme myelination N-drop nasal natural normal nouns null segment obstruent output pairs palatalized paper phonetic phonological rules phonotactic pitch position possible predict present principle probably problem pronouns pronunciation proposed PSSM question reference relations relationship restrictions semantic sentences sequence speaker specific speech standard theory stem stress string structural description suffix syllable syntactic syntax tion tone tone languages transformational transformational grammar underlying form University unmarked utterance variable verb vocal vowel words